Latest update February 7th, 2025 2:57 PM
Sep 19, 2008 Editorial
More than three decades ago, there was talk in Guyana about shifting the capital from Georgetown to the North West.
There was no talk about global warming and climate change. Instead, the move to shift the capital was to make use of that part of the country that offered the best hope of development.
For starters, the North West has some of the best agricultural lands; it is above sea level and sits on the largest county in the country.
The people who came up with the idea noted that the rapid development of Brazil caused a shift of the capital from Rio de Janeiro to Brasilia.
We are repeatedly in the midst of talk about global warming and climate change. Three years ago, when this country suffered the worst flood in its history, panic stepped in.
For the first time, people recognized how fragile this narrow strip of coastland is that accommodates some 70 per cent of the population.Indeed, the floods were concentrated in Regions Three and Four, and to some extent, Region Five.
The effects were harshest in Region Four, and losses were widespread; people, crops and livestock died. The international community was forced to rush to our aid.
One group duly informed us that, had the flood continued, we could have faced a situation where the pressure of water from the land would have caused the sea defence to collapse.
Needless to say, with the coastal plain being some six feet below sea level, the disaster would have been catastrophic.
The capital and the coast would have been lost forever. Salt water would have put paid to the agricultural lands and to the very existence of this country.
People were forced to vacate their homes, which were often under as much as four or five feet of water for three weeks.
The panic is still there, even as we recall the authorities wisely contemplating evacuating large sections of the population to the higher reaches of the country.
On the international scene, we have the people who are talking about melting polar caps and rising sea levels. The threat is for low-lying states.
The word is that they will all lose their current coastline, and their populations would be forced to seek higher ground. Island states would be no better off, as is currently being further emphasised by ferocious hurricane activity, but that is of no consolation to us.
Over the past few decades, we have had to shift our sea defence inland, in cases by as much as 200 metres, because of the relentless attack from the Atlantic; but, even then, we did not contemplate the danger, choosing instead to fool ourselves into believing that the attack by the Atlantic was seasonal.
Over the past few years, we have been spending millions of dollars on sea defence, because there is constant collapse. But shifting now is easier said than done.
In the first instance, the cost of shifting all the major enterprises would be astronomical, and even as the threat remains, people are still investing in property and business. We spend even more millions on roads and bridges, and continue to enhance those constructions.
The largest sugar factory has been constructed on the same coastal belt that is being threatened, because the only sugar plantations exist in the threatened areas.
We are even seeking to expand the rice cultivations, because sugar and rice still represent the bulk of this country’s export earnings.
Perhaps we recognize that the threat is not immediate, and that while the coastland may be under threat, it could be decades — long after many of us would have departed this earth — before the threat is manifested.
At the same time, we have to live, and whether we like it or not, the coastal belt still represents our salvation. The food belt cannot be shifted at this time.
What is worrying is that we seem disinclined to pay heed to any threat to the coastal belt from the rising water levels, and we are not making any noteworthy arrangement to counter the threat. Perhaps we are of the view that we simply cannot cope.
Feb 07, 2025
2025 CWI Regional 4-Day Championships Round 2…GHE vs. CCC Day 2 -Eagles (1st innings 166-6, Imlach 58*) trail CCC by 209 runs Kaieteur Sports- Combined Campuses and Colleges (CCC) owned Day 2...Peeping Tom… Kaieteur News-There is little dispute that Donald Trump knows how to make an entrance. He does so without... more
Antiguan Barbudan Ambassador to the United States, Sir Ronald Sanders By Sir Ronald Sanders Kaieteur News- The upcoming election... more
Freedom of speech is our core value at Kaieteur News. If the letter/e-mail you sent was not published, and you believe that its contents were not libellous, let us know, please contact us by phone or email.
Feel free to send us your comments and/or criticisms.
Contact: 624-6456; 225-8452; 225-8458; 225-8463; 225-8465; 225-8473 or 225-8491.
Or by Email: [email protected] / [email protected]